Every campus and GLO should put out a memo at the beginning of the school year that simply says, "The Brothel Law is a myth. The end."

It's amazing to me that this has been passed around in so many states and towns for so many years, and that people believe it. And even with social media, the myth hasn't lost speed, but instead, it seems to have gained it.

It would be nice if we could verify that every state does have sorority housing as part of debunking it. I quickly checked Wyoming, because that state only has one school with Greek Life (or the potential for Greek Life) and that one isn't a problem to verify. http://chaptersites.chiomega.com/default.aspx?site=101 .

Still like to be able to contact that law professor...

__________________
Because "undergrads, please abandon your national policies and make something up" will end well --KnightShadow

Oh man. I just heard a law professor tell her class that Pennsylvania has a brothel law and therefore there are no sorority houses in the state.

A LAW PROFESSOR.

Quote:

Originally Posted by candygirl200413

I get the same thing! I go to school in VA and people are like "the reason our campus won't get sorority housing is because of the brothel law, it's so annoying!" and im like well I guess someone should tell W&M, UVA and Virginia Tech because they definitely missed the memo!

Quote:

Originally Posted by naraht

It would be nice if we could verify that every state does have sorority housing as part of debunking it. I quickly checked Wyoming, because that state only has one school with Greek Life (or the potential for Greek Life) and that one isn't a problem to verify. http://chaptersites.chiomega.com/default.aspx?site=101 .

Still like to be able to contact that law professor...

It likely would never be a state issue to begin with - it would be a city or county ordinance. Detailed land use and planning laws are usually enacted at the local level, though you may have state laws that influence land use policy-making and governance in a broad way.

Every campus and GLO should put out a memo at the beginning of the school year that simply says, "The Brothel Law is a myth. The end."

It's amazing to me that this has been passed around in so many states and towns for so many years, and that people believe it. And even with social media, the myth hasn't lost speed, but instead, it seems to have gained it.

The campuses are usually the ones propogating it. This way they can say "awww, so sorry, we'd LOVE to help you but our hands are tied."